Indigenous Africans in America Pt. 2 – Where are the Slave Ships?

Indigenous Africans in America Pt. 2 – Where are the Slave Ships?

There is a growing belief that the Atlantic Slave Trade is a myth and that the black people you see around you were always in America. 

 The idea is that “they lied to you and indoctrinated you with the huge fairytale that we came from Africa during the Slave Trade.” A major proponent of this idea is Dane Calloway. Some of his videos are here: 

He does an excellent job of poking holes in largely irrelevant issues in various presentations of the history of the Atlantic Slave Trade. He does this to shore up his claim that black people were already in America before Columbus, most likely because he knows there is no solid evidence for that claim, as explained in part 1 of this article. 

http://www.innercivilization.com/2023/05/indigenous-africans-in-america-evidence.html

One area he questions is the general consensus on exactly how many slaves were brought to the Americas. It is an estimate, not a hard number, so he uses that as a red herring. 

https://www.neh.gov/humanities/2010/septemberoctober/feature/gross-injustice

The other question he raises is, “where are the slave ships?” These are seemingly valid questions, but the answer to either one of them doesn’t logically lead to the conclusion that the Slave Trade didn’t exist, or that black people in America aren’t from Africa. That is more than a stretch. If it’s not entirely clear whether there were 12 million, 3 million or even 300,000 slaves brought from Africa, that doesn’t mean there was no slave trade or that none were brought. 

So my focus here isn’t so much on a conclusive, absolute answer to those questions (because they aren’t answerable in any final manner) but to get to the heart of the matter which is, 1) was there a slave trade, and 2) are the overwhelming majority of us from Africa? 

If you don’t feel like reading, the answer to both is obviously just what you thought it was – yes. It’s a shame that we have to go through this but this is a reflection of our current state of learning. 

They are saying, basically, everything you were told about slavery is all part of an elaborate scheme or a conspiracy to hide your true identity. And that all of those discussing a slave trade must all be in cahoots with each other, or they’re being controlled by some nefarious group or individual using them to deceive us.

This gets to the real meaning of history. It is not simply a “story” or “his”-story as you so often hear.  No, modern history is an inquiry or an investigation into what most likely happened in the past. When looking at past events or phenomena, the question to ask is -what is the most probable explanation for these events?

So…where are the Slave Ships? 

This question is not far from asking, for example, ‘what happened to the paper plates we used at the hundreds of barbeques we’ve been to over the years? And then saying, if we can’t produce all the plates, that means the barbeques never happened. 

Keep in mind that ships from the 17th and 18th centuries were made of wood, and that wood didn’t last.  

The longevity of wooden ships varied wildly, depending on the wood they were built of and how well they were maintained. Ships built of well seasoned hardwoods could last several decades in active use, providing that any problems that arose were promptly repaired. On the other hand, ships built of softwood or timber that was too green often rotted very quickly. There are cases recorded of ships that deteriorated so fast that they had to be scrapped after only two or three years of service.

https://archive.nytimes.com/cityroom.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/07/14/18th-century-ship-found-at-trade-center-site/

This article in the New York times discusses an 18th Century ship found in the ruins of the World Trade Center after 9/11. In the 7th paragraph note it indicates that the ship’s wood began deteriorating as soon as it was exposed to air. Later in the article, an archeologist mentions that, “if the sun had been out, the wood would have already started to fall apart.”  

https://archive.nytimes.com/cityroom.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/07/14/18th-century-ship-found-at-trade-center-site/.

 Another factor that should be mentioned is damage caused by the teredo navalis, a saltwater mollusk but commonly called shipworm. It bores into the underwater hull of wooden ships, unless they are protected by sheathing. The rate of infestation is worse in warm tropical seas. On the other hand, the organism cannot live in fresh or brackish water, such as the Baltic Sea. The teredo could sometimes reduce an unprotected wooden ship sailing in the tropics to a sinking condition within a year or too, as the early European explorers learned to their cost.  

For example, here is an article showing a 17th century ship found in the Baltic Sea which was very well preserved. Slave ships, however., navigated the much warmer waters near the equator. 

https://www.sciencealert.com/incredibly-well-preserved-17th-century-ship-found-in-the-depths-of-the-baltic-sea

Out of the hundereds of thousands of all the wooden ships in use from 1600 A.D. to 1810 A.D., no more than 35 have survived. Even the famed Nina, Pinta and the Santa Maria which Columbus sailed on have never been found. Does that mean historians reject the fact that Columbus reached the Americas? Of course not. Historians use as much evidence as is available in order to piece together a picture of what most likely happened in the past. 

So they would use accounts of his contemporaries, journals, diaries, the impact on native Americans, subsequent voyages, the change in the European economy, etc., all of which point to the very high likelihood that Columbus sailed to America in those ships. On the other hand,  probability that the parties involved conspired to make up a story or a fairy tale in order to fool people about the ships is terribly slim. 

Let’s do the same thing with the Atlantic Slave Trade. Let’s not look at stories or presentations let’s look at a set of specific pieces of information and primary sources and weigh them against the chance that they are part of a larger scheme to fool us into believing in a slave trade fairytale. 

1. Here is an act of the U.S. Congress prohibiting the importation of slaves or negroes into the United States. The act had been hotly debated but was finally passed on March 2, 1807. 


 — If there was no slave trade why would there be a specific act banning the slave trade? Or maybe they made it all up to put it in text books to fool us into thinking the slave trade was real. 

2. This is the charter granted to the Royal Africa Company in 1663. It gave a monopoly to the Company on trading in slaves from ports in West Africa. 


— If there was no slave trade, why is there a charter given to this company to trade in slaves? Maybe they just made up the charter and no slaves were ever traded. Oh wait, below is also inventory from the company which included…slaves. 

 https://encyclopediavirginia.org/12854-c8df6dcad690f94/.  https://www.blackpast.org/global-african-history/groups-organizations-global-african-history/royal-african-company-2/

3. Here is a personal account of Samuel Ajay Crowther, a Nigerian captured in the slave trade in 1821. He details his experience of being captured in Osogun, Yorubaland and sold to Portuguese slave traders on the coast. 


–How can this be if there was no slave trade? Maybe he is lying. But why would he lie? Maybe he was bribed in order to fool black people in America that there was a slave trade.

4. In 1482, the Portuguese built the Elmina Castle in Ghana, first as a trading post but it was later converted into a depot where enslaved Africans were brought from different regions of West Africa. The captives were brought from the interior sold to the Portuguese who later sold them to the Dutch for goods and horses. 


— Of course this was all done to fool black people in America into thinking the slave trade was real. 

5. Just in case the Elmina Castle didn’t fool people into believing in the slave trade, the Swedes collaborated with the Portuguese to build the Cape Coast Castle in Accra, Ghana. 


And if that didn’t work, thirty-nine more slave castles were built along the Gold Coast of West Africa. 

6. These are artifacts found from the Henrietta Marie, a British slave ship excavated in 1983 which wrecked off the Florida Keys. Among the artifacts found were the ship’s bell, 80 sets of shackles, iron trading bars, two cast iron cannons, and six elephants tusks. As far as their relationship to the existence of a slave trade, they speak for themselves. 

https://www.spiritsofthepassagevenue.org/artifacts

http://www.slaveryimages.org/s/slaveryimages/item/2614

https://www.melfisher.org/copy-of-henrietta-marie-1700

7. This is the autobiography of Olaudah Equiano. He recounts his experiences of being captured in his Igbo village and his experience on an English Slave ship on voyage to Barbados and then to Virginia. 


–The autobiography is clearly authentic, but was he lying? Was he really an indigenous American making up stories just to fool other black people to believe that there was a slave trade? Considering the amount of detail about what he called eboe customs, crops, music, etc., it seems highly unlikely he was in on this elaborate scheme to fabricate an African slave trade. https://igboacienthistory.weebly.com/olaudah-equiano-igbo-origin.html

8. This is Omar Ibn Said, an ethnic Fula. 


He also wrote an autobiography which discussed being captured from his homeland in Futa Toro Senegal and being sold in Charleston S.C.  Could he have been forced by the conspiracy to make this story up? That would be a stretch considering he also wrote this copy of the 67th Surah of the Qur’an in Arabic (his biography was written in Arabic also.) Coincidentally, it is written in Fulani script.  

https://www.loc.gov/item/prn-19-004/

9. This is Abdur Rahman Ibn Sori, a Fulani prince.


He was born in Timbuktu, Mali and later moved to Futa Djallon, Guinea. He was captured during a battle taken to the Gambia River and shipped via Dominica to New Orleans. This is a copy of the Lord’s Prayer written by Abdur Rahman in the authentic Fulani Arabic script of his time. In 1826, at the encouragement of local newspaperman, Andrew Marschalk, Abdul Rahman wrote a letter in Arabic to his family, and this letter was forwarded via United States Senator Thomas Reed to the U.S. Consulate in Morocco. The consul shared the letter with Sultan Abderrahmane II, who asked that U. S. President John Quincy Adams and Secretary of State Henry Clay intervene for the release of Abdul Rahman in exchange for the freeing of several Americans illegally held in his country.  — What is the likelihood all of these events and documents could have been made up?

10.  This is a document from the U.S. Circuit Court of the Southern District of New York relating to the trial of Nathaniel Gordon who was tried, convicted and executed for having engaged in the slave trade under the Piracy Law of 1820. — According to the logic of some, they tried and killed this man over a slave trade which never existed.

11. These are the Thomas Clarkson papers. He was an abolitionist and leading campaigner against the slave trade. He founded the ‘Society for Effecting the Abolition of the Slave Trade. ‘  — Again we have to ask, why all this documented activity if there was no slave trade?

https://radar.auctr.edu/islandora/object/auc.031:9999

12. Here are the memoirs of Ayyub Sulayman Diallo, the son of a Fula scholar.


  He was captured in his homeland in 1731 while trying to sell goods and two of his father’s enslaved people. He was sold into the trans-Atlantic slave trade and shipped to Annapolis, Maryland. 

https://ldhi.library.cofc.edu/exhibits/show/african-muslims-in-the-south/five-african-muslims/ayyuba-suleiman-diallo

13. Henry Laurens was one of the most wealthy merchants in America during the 1700’s. 


He formed a commercial partnership with George Austin to become ‘Austin, Laurens & (George) Appleby.’ His business among other interests was the import and sale of slaves.  Here is an advertisement in the newspaper taken out by his company. Notice the ad says the slaves came from Sierra Leone not indigenous America — which is peculiar considering the Atlantic Slave Trade was a “fairytale.” This clearly doesn’t appear to be story or a myth, this is business. In the second ad also notice the amount of the slave cargo (250).)

14. Among the classic oral epics of the Senegambia region tells of Kelafa Saane, a warrior nyantio from Kaabu (Senegambia.) The epic relates that he fought killed and caught slaves: he put to death all those rulers who honoured him with meat, praising only those who brought slaves. (see, National Centre for Arts and Culture, Research and Documentation, transcribed cassettes 573A and B. Also, “Fistful of Shells”, Peter Green, p. 436 (2019)).  This presents a witness to the widespread slave raids, corruption and abuse which led to the rise of the Futa Tooro Empire surrounding the Senegal River. One major figure to arise during these widespread social and political upheavals was Imam Abdul Qadir Kan. He would abolish slavery during his rule in the late 1700’s. Kan had not only ended the Atlantic Slave Trade in his country but he had also refused Europeans passage either overland or along the Senegal River in their effors to acquire slaves further inland. (See., Walking Qur’an, Rudolph Ware (2014) , pp. 114-116. 

— This of course has nothing to do with a propaganda campaign to trick black people into believing they weren’t Native Americans. This is basic African history. 

http://thepanorama.shear.org/2020/06/12/an-atlantic-of-abolitionists/

15. The Charming Sally.

In 1800 congress passed an act making it illegal for American citizens to engage in the slave trade between any nations. 

https://www.docsteach.org/documents/document/slave-trade-act-1794

In 1803, the ship ‘Charming Sally’ was seized in violation of that act. Below is a warrant issued for the seizure of that ship. It ordered the marshal and deputies of the Massachusetts district to arrest and take into custody the ships equipment and cargo. A libel had been filed by Isaac Sherman of Boston against the ship for the transportation of slaves contrary to law. — This is just more documented legal and congressional activity regarding a “non-existent slave trade. “

https://www.archives.gov/education/lessons/slave-trade.html

16. The São José 

In the 1980’s local divers found the wreckage of the slave ship São José that sank off the coast of Capetown South Africa. One key to identifying the ship was the long rectangular iron ballasts which were used to hold the ship down and offset the weight of its human cargo from Mozambique. 

17.  Here is a descendent of Ashanti royalty acknowledging their (well documented) role in the slave trade with Henry Louis Gates. @11:00.

18.  The Dahomey Empire (currently Benin) is shown here.

It is known as a kingdom which grew directly as a result of the Atlantic Slave Trade.  The Dahomey is said here to have traded 1,000,000 people from different parts of the region. The slaving wars are documented in the architecture of the buildings and palaces. (What are the chances this was done to fool Black Americans?) @13:00 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HIRC2OKYF-o

19. The DNA evidence. 

As noted in the earlier article. The indigenous American DNA didn’t show any signs or markers that matched African DNA. Now studies have been done to match survivors of the middle passage with African DNA to no one’s surprise they matched the DNA of West African regions. The only surprise was that more DNA matched Nigerians further inland from the coast. This isn’t a story. This is scientific proof that the slave trade brought Africans to the Americas. While DNA tests have their limits the overwhelming evidence point directly to Africa and not indigenous America.  https://www.smithsonianmag.com/smart-news/study-reveals-brutal-genetic-legacy-slave-trade-180975423/https://www.newscientist.com/article/2249839-how-the-slave-trade-left-its-mark-in-the-dna-of-people-in-the-americas/.

https://www.cell.com/ajhg/fulltext/S0002-9297(20)30200-7

20. Here’s another testimony from an African and not “the whiteman who is trying to convince you that you aren’t aboriginal Americans.”

This is an article from the Nigerian journalist Adaobi Tricia Nwaubani, explaining how her great grand-father, Nwaubani Ogogo Oriaku, sold slaves among other goods.  

https://www.bbc.com/news/world-africa-53444752

21. We’ll end this with Lamine Kaba from the Fouta Djallon, Guinea who has documented the account of his capture from his homeland in 1799. He spent 30 years enslaved in America before returning to Africa (Liberia.) 

He is quoted as saying this:

  “There are good men in America, but all are very ignorant of Africa.” 

Sylviane Diof, Servants of Allah, p.144 1998.

No one single piece of evidence conclusively proves there was a vast slave trade, but in science and history there is the notion of ‘consilience.’  Consilience is the principle that evidence from independent, unrelated sources can “converge” on strong conclusions. 

These various pieces of evidence obviously don’t come from the same sources. They are not necessarily related by time, place or parties in direct communication with each other, but they all converge on the same conclusion, that there was a vast business enterprise we call the Atlantic Slave Trade. 

http://www.innercivilization.com/2023/07/indigenous-africans-in-america-pt-2.html

Being Black and Muslim: Dispelling afrocentrist doubts

This is an article reposted from Blackdawahnetwork.com named ‘A Summation of the Arguments and Rebuttals to the Afrocentric Criticisms of Islam in Africa’ Black Dawah Network is an initiative set up in America to help to Bring Islam to oppressed Black communities. All rights belong to the author of the article Professor Shareef Muhammad and Black Dawah Network. Link to original article: http://blackdawahnetwork.com/2019/02/a-summation-of-the-arguments-and-rebuttals-to-the-afrocentric-criticisms-of-islam-in-africa/

In this article by Professor Shareef Muhammad, he summarizes arguments and rebuttals to Afrocentrist criticisms of Islam in Africa.

1.) Afrocentrist myth: Islam are that it spread by the sword, undermined traditional African cultures, and that the Arab Slave Trade depopulated Africa and destabilized those African societies. They alleged that both conquest and slavery were the principal means by which Arabs introduce Islam to Africans.

Response: These assertions are hyperbolic and not supported by either the African sources or the external Arab sources that make up the corpus of literature that are the core source of information on the subject. The events in question have been inflated to gain ground in the identity politics of the diaspora. The Arab Slave Trade was never a defining issue on the continent of Africa but was part of the normal state practices of that time. In fact, Walter Rodney in his esteemed work How Europe Underdeveloped Africa said that the term Arab Slave Trade was a misnomer since its used to describe bilateral trade agreements across a myriad of ethnic groups in which Africans had full agency.

Metanarrative: Islam south of the Sahel was an indigenous affair in which Africans controlled the terms on which Islam was adopted and practiced. It’s proselytizing, practice, and politics were entirely African. This is evinced in how unique Islam was in the sub-Saharan from Islam in the Levant and North Africa. Even in North Africa where Islam did spread by force the Arabs never made it across the whole of North Africa leaving the assimilation and practice of Islam entirely to the Berbers. Berber attitudes and behavior towards the sub-Sahara were Berber not Arab or determined by Arabs.

2.) Afrocentrist myth: The Almoravid were Arab invaders who toppled Ghana in 1076 ACE and this is how Islam was introduced to the region.

Response: This event is controversial because there is no unambiguous mention in the Ghanaian oral traditions or the chronicles of the Arab writers of this time (11th century) nor is there a scholarly consensus that this invasion happened. At most the primary sources point only to a correlation between the spread of Islam throughout the western sub-Saharan and the Almoravid efforts at doing so through what we know were missionary work not a military invasion. David Conrad and Humphrey Fisher wrote an exhaustive treatment of the Arabic sources and African oral accounts called The Conquest That Never Was. They concluded that they could find “nothing in the traditions to indicate any conquest of the eleventh-century Sahelian state known to Arab geographers as “Ghana.”” Yet, this remains a controversy among actual scholars. So, let us explore the position that the Almoravid conquest did take place. All of the sources that describe the Almoravids in sub-Saharan relate them as an African contingent of the movement that originated in Senegambia. Cheikh Anta Diop who takes the stance that there was an invasion and that they seized Aoudaghast and Ghana saying on page 163 of Precolonial Black Africa that “This was the only time white troops attempted to impose Islam through violence.” The “white” Berber to which Diop is referring took up a retreat in Senegal where he attracted Senegalese who converted and aided him in this military campaign to spread Islam through force. But their victories were confined to only the northern part of the Ghana, Sijilmasa and the Maghreb. They did not succeed in West Africa, to the east and west. The conversion of these regions was the work of autochthonous marabouts (West African Sufis) who were preaching the religion. So, even if we take the theory of an invasion we see that even that is described as an indigenous affair. The fact that the Ghanaian oral sources point to draught instead of northern conquerors as the cause of Ghana’s fall at the least minimizes this event. Diop goes on to say that “The primary reason for the success of Islam in Black Africa, with one exception, consequently stems from the fact that it was propagated peacefully at first by solitary Arabo-Berber travelers to certain Black kings and notables, who then spread it about them to those under their jurisdiction.” pg. 163.

3.) Afrocentrist myth: The Arab Invasion Destroyed Egypt and Enslaved the Native Black Population.

Response: Ancient Kemet was destroyed and compromised over a millennium prior to the 640 A.C.E when the Muslims invaded. The Kemet that Afrocentrists romanticize had been long gone. When the Muslims arrived they were entering a thoroughly Hellenized, and Romanized Egypt whose native population was an amalgam of black African, Phoenician, Greek, Roman and Eastern European. Whole population of Italians and many Vandals and Goths moved into North Africa during the time of Augustine. The Berbers were made lighter when Europeans moved into North Africa since as far back the Ice Age. The Hyksos colonization of Northern Egypt didn’t help either. The further west you went in North Africa the lighter the population. Alfred J. Butler’s The Arab Invasion and the Last 30 Years of Roman Dominion. The Baqt Treaty exposes the lie that the Arabs introduced the enslavement of black Africans. Its pertinent to this controversy because it was the first time the Arabs tried to invade sub-Sahara and they failed. The Baqt Treaty was an agreement in which the Nubians who were the victors set the terms of peace and offered to pay the Arabs slaves as a peace offering. The point here is that like everywhere else in Africa up till the 1800 sub-Sahara African states negotiated with outsiders from a position of strength and autonomy. This contradicts the Afro-centrist version of African history which insists on portraying Africans as eternal victims. They had full agency during these transactions and their encounters with Arabs who were numerically and technologically inferior to the Africans they encountered. To understand their decision to give slaves to foreigners requires that we look at African states and politics as they were and not as we want to for the purposes of our petty arguments cultural authenticity.

4.) Afro-centrist myth: Islam is an Arab not an African religion.

Response: What is the point being made here? This is a strange criticism setting aside for now whether its valid. Did Africans view themselves as African first or as their tribe first? There is no single African religion there are African religions and they do not equivocate. So, while they share similarities they have very pronounced differences. The religious practices of the Dogan would have been perceived just as foreign to the Xhosa as Islam. You cannot change tribes and therefore you cannot change tribal religions which are tied exclusively to the tribe. Since Islam was not being forced on them by outsiders and because African rulers accepted the religion on African terms and not Arab terms the indigenization of the religion was faster and more natural. However, the fact remains that Islam as a religion debuted in the Arabian Peninsula with its Prophet being an Arab, and the official language being Arabic. I suppose you could make a surface argument that based only on these facts that it’s an Arab religion. However, if you are going to look at the 30 years of Seerah (life of the Prophet (saws)) during his mission as a Prophet then one would honestly have to emerge with a different picture. Why can’t we reduce Islam to being an Arab religion?

  1. The Arabs were the first and most vehement enemies of Muhammad (saws)’s when Africa was welcoming. The first hijra into Ethiopia led to the first free practicing Muslim community. Islam was settled peacefully in Africa before Arabia. If Islam was an Arab religion then why were the Arabs so hostile?
  2. Many of the early companions of the Prophet (saws) were not Arab but African, Persian, and European. From Bilal to Salman al Farsi (may Allah grant them Jinnah). Most of them had been slaves within Arabia. If you were to ask them they would have said that they do not see Islam as an Arab or slave religion.
  3. The Prophet (saws) is reported to have said in a hadith that the person who stammers trying to read the Quran because Arabic is not their native tongue receives more blessings for their struggle than the native who speaks with fluency. This is the most explicit denial of Arab supremacy.
  4. The Prophet (saws) said in his final sermon that there is no superiority of an Arab over a non-Arab nor a non-Arab over an Arab. This is an even more explicit rejection of Arab supremacy.
  5. In another hadith the Prophet (saw) is reported to have said that you must obey your ruler even if he be an Abyssinian slave with the head of a raison. Everyone is so focused on the phrase “head of a raison” that they completely missed the meaning of the statement. He said obey your Black African ruler. He is foretelling the rule of Africans.
  6. The difference between Arab and West African is as vast as the difference between West African and East African and the similarly between East African and Arab is as much as the similarity between those on the coast of West Africa and those in the interior of West Africa. In other words the foreignness of Arabs depended on where in Africa you were and what part of Arabia you were from. Yemeni has more in common with Ethiopians and Somalis than Kuwaitis. The Arabness of Islam is less of a barrier to the Africans in the 11th century than it is to black people in the Diaspora who have been Westernized. Ironically the same Afrocentrists who cite the foreignness of the Arab are even less familiar with African cultures than they’d like to admit which is one of the reasons why they focus such much on ancient Egypt. It’s not a present reality (culturally) that they have to deal with.

5.) Afrocentrist Myth The Arab Slave Trade. The Arabs introduced the enslavement of Africans that paved the way for European enslavement of Africans.

Response: The trans-Saharan Trade and more significantly the Indian Ocean Trade predate the rise of Islam by thousands of years with the Indian Ocean Trade dating back to 2500 B.C.E. The spread of Islam simply made Arabs the new participants in something that was old. Africans were equal partners in their commercial relations and more often operated from a position of strength. In both the trans-Saharan Trade and Indian Ocean Trade slaves were never the central item traded. Slaves was part of a wider trade in gold, ivory, and soapstone. The Indian Ocean Trade in particular was already thousands of years old and had been controlled by different ethnicities in that region when the Arabs first came into possession of it. Why not call it the East African Slave Trade, the Greek Slave Trade, the Roman Slave Trade, the Gujurat Slave Trade, the Garamante Slave Trade, or the Persian Slave Trade? Why not call it the gold trade, the soapstone trade, or the ivory trade? Why is there only an interest the Arab period? To call the trans-Saharan and Indian Ocean Trade the Arab Slave Trade when it was practiced for thousands of years before the Arabs took possession and slaves were not even their central focus is a political decision not scholarly one.

6.) Afrocentrist myth The Indian Ocean Trade depopulated East Africa and ravaged the continent. It proves that the Arabs were the first enslavers of Africans and laid the foundation for the European enslavement of Africans.

Response: The Indian Ocean Trade predated the Arab involvement. It goes back as far as 2500 B.C.E. Before it was the Arab slave trade it would have been the Indian slave trade, the Persian slave trade, the Greek slave trade, and the Roman slave trade. It was only the Arab slave trade during the Abbasid period. During this time slave raiding occurred in fits and starts, spikes and periods but there were also places where it didn’t happen at all. The Zanji Uprising was larger and more impactful than the slave trade itself. Historian M.A. Shaban argues that the majority of participants were not slaves but free blacks and Arabs with some runaway slaves. There would not have been enough slaves to do the kind of devastation that happened. The irony is that it did more damage to Iraq than it did to the East African states that traded with them voluntarily. The aggressive slave raiding that is so often referred to belongs to the 1800s and has much to do with European activities in India and the Middle East at this time as the Trans-Atlantic Slave Trade was practically over. The scramble for Africa accelerated the slave raiding in Southeast Africa. After the Abbasid period ended the Arabs were simply the face of Islamic power which had passed to the Turks. This brings up to very significant facts about Arabs, Islam, and slavery: the majority of the slaves in the Arab world were white and Persian who overthrew their Arab masters and subjugated them and eventually took African slaves from Indian and African middle men. There was no organized enterprise that principally targeted Africa for slaves to build up Arab countries. African slaves were used on an as needed basis but for the most instrumental slave labor the Arabs relied on whites.

Note: The majority of African slaves were used as servants (guards). This function would not have required millions of slaves such as was the case with the military whom the Arabs relied upon for their military campaigns that were directly responsible for their building up of wealth. Hence, there is some doubt about the number of African slaves being in the millions that are found in secondary sources on the zanji trade.

7.) Afrocentrist Argument: Arabs are just as racist towards Africans if not more than Europeans.

Response: The inferior status of Africans only appears when we examine Arab-African relations within Arab societies but between Arab nations and African nations going all the way back to Abyssinia we see that Africans were in a position of political superiority and when the Arabs interacted with sovereign African nations they did so with diplomacy and deference. African sovereignty did not make Africans or Africa vulnerable to outside opinions.

8.) Afrocentrist Myth: The Hamitic-hypothesis is the rationale that the Arabs relied on for their inferior view of Africans and it has given African’s who’ve embraced Islam a negative view of other Africans.

Response: Some Arabs involved in the enslavement of Africans employed this theory but it was not widespread either among the Arabs or the Africans. Africans who did use this used it to disparage other tribes with whom they did not get along with. This was not a consequence of the Hamitic-hypothesis but rather their decision to use this was a consequence of tribal conflicts. Ham does not appear in the Quran or Hadith. He is not a part of Islamic hagiography. The story of Ham only appears in Judeo-Christian sources and the story itself flies in the face of what Islam demands we believe about the Prophet’s like Noah. The usedof Hamitic curse to justify the subjugation of Africans began with a Syrian Christian and it was adopted by Arabs and Africans with no religious scruples. Its proliferation and impact of religious thinking in the continent was negligible. Those who in West Africa who were using it as part of the rationale for their tribal wars that predated the rationale itself were brought under control by Uthman don Fodio when he established the Sokoto Caliphate.

9.) Afrocentrist myth: Islam did more harm to Africa than good. It devastating the continent.

Response: This is a personal opinion. However, during the time of this supposed devastation Africa reached its last great renaissance. Even Chancellor Williams ruminates in The Destruction of Black Civilization when he writes: “It may not be without significance that the Renaissance in Africa occurred at the same time it did in Europe, between the 15th and 16th centuries, and that in both Europe and Africa Islamic sources were the catalyst.” So, even Chancellor Williams had to concede this point. Islam impacted sub-Saharan West Africa in two significant ways:

1.The spread of Islam brought the major overland trade routes that connected Asia with Africa and Europe. This enlarged the scope of the trans-Saharan Trade which then transformed Ghana from a local kingdom to an empire. The conversion to Islam by West African kings and notables brought these West African empires into an international association of an established trade network that made these West African empires the wealthiest of the entire continent. Mansa Musa is the heir to this reality.

2.The West African Kingdoms of Ghana, Mali, and Songhai were successively more Islamic, more literate, more erudite, politically more sophisticated, and economically more powerful concomitantly.

Islam was the catalyst for both of these as can clearly be established when comparing them to their non-Muslim counterparts. Those who wish to say that the religion of Islam was a force of bad can only do so by denying these facts.

Professor Shareef Muhammad has taught history at Georgia State University and Islamic studies at Spelman University. <img class="i-amphtml-intrinsic-sizer" alt="" role="presentation" aria-hidden="true" src="data:image/svg+xml;charset=utf-8,” style=”max-width: 100%; display: block !important;”>He has a masters in history at Kent State University with his thesis on The Cultural Jihad in the antelbellum South: How Muslim slaves preserved their religious/cultural identity during slavery.